Lasca Dry Isn’t Here to 'Behave' on New Single
'Behave' moves with the confidence of someone who’s stopped asking for permission from others, an alt pop/indie rock anthem for anyone who’s ever lowered their voice to keep the peace, only to realise peace isn’t peace if it costs you your spine.
Where Lasca's earlier tracks hinted at emotional self questioning, 'Behave' hits with clarity and a change of pace. Co-written with John Castle and born out of a fast, instinctive studio session, the track carries that immediacy in its bones. Nothing here feels overworked.

The song has an up beat conviction to it, compared to the lyrics and emotion behind the track, and really polishes a newly found route for the Tasmanian singer-songwriter.
The accompanying video leans into that same unfiltered spirit, following Lasca through city streets in a blur of motion. It doesn’t glamorise rebellion so much as normalise it, the everyday, sweaty, awkward bravery of moving through the world without shrinking yourself for other people’s comfort. It feels less like a performative piece and more like a confession caught on camera.
'Behave' is the latest glimpse into Lasca Dry’s forthcoming debut EP 'Time Keeps Drifting', a project that traces the messy emotional terrain of becoming, doubt, anxiety, desire, self trust, and the slow process of learning whose voice you’re actually listening to.
What makes Lasca Dry compelling isn’t just the polish of her sound, it’s the honesty of her arc. She’s not presenting herself as fully formed, untouchable, or above the chaos. She’s documenting the friction of it all unfolding. The push and pull between wanting to be loved and wanting to be free. 'Behave' lands right in that pressure point.
In a landscape crowded with carefully curated cool, Lasca Dry is doing something more dangerous, she’s letting her instincts lead. 'Behave' dares you to watch her stop caring if you do, and that’s exactly the kind of energy that turns a promising artist into a real one.